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Original Video Animation

 Original Video Animation
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FeatureClass
 Original Video Animation
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Original Video Animation
 Original Video Animation
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OriginalVideoAnimation
 Original Video Animation
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Animated shows produced for the Direct to Video market, almost universally abbreviated "OVA", or more rarely "OAV" (for "original(ly) animated (for) video"), and even more rarely OAD (same for DVD). The term is almost always associated with anime; however, this form of storytelling is beginning to become popular in the anglosphere with recent animation based on comic characters and TV shows. Unfortunately, these still labour under the shadow of the term "direct-to-video".
While the terms "direct-to-video" and "direct-to-DVD" have negative overtones, essentially being synonyms for Shovelware in the United States, "OVA" has almost exactly the opposite connotation. This partially arises from the view that Western "direct-to-video" releases are not good enough (or too explicit) for theaters; OVAs, on the other hand, are seen as a step up from regular television production. Because the production house need not adhere to the rapid-fire schedule or constrained budget of a TV series or feature-length film, more effort and care can be applied to an OVA, resulting in a much higher level of quality. Additionally, since OVAs aren't aired to the public, censorship is a moot point, which allows shows for older audiences to avoid ducking more mature subject matter, and shows for younger audiences to faithfully adapt some of the more violent or risqué aspects of the manga they were derived from without censorship toning it down. On the flip side, the vast majority of hentai series are produced and released as OVAs, just like much live-action pornography is released directly to home media or online. Given the general lack of a clear-cut production schedule, the time duration of an OVA is rather varied— some are 26 minutes long, while others are 60-80 minutes, but the idea of an OVA being up to two hours long is uncommon, with the longest examples typically reaching around 90 - 100 minutes at the very most. In most cases, rather than produce one single, extended-length instalment, production houses typically produce a 'miniseries' when adapting longer manga, ranging from between 2 to 5 or even 10 individual episodes.
There are some caveats to the increased freedom, though. OVAs are often produced "on speculation", with no guarantee that the story they tell will ever be completed— and many are not. At least one OVA series ends with a plaintive plea for more money so the creators can continue making the show. However, even this is not always a guarantee— the Hellsing OVA series managed to adapt the entire ten volume manga it was based on.
One trend which has become evident recently is the continuation of broadcast television series in OVA form after they complete their initial run; the aforementioned lack of broadcast standards also allows writers to work in anything they couldn't put into the original TV show. Inversely, the exposure of a broadcast initial run may be a lure for viewer interest in the less censored, more serious story continuing on home media. Due to the heavy market decline of physical media in the west during the late 2000's and early 2010's, both the broadcast and OVA-exclusive material are typically carried over via streaming services, thus removing the physical distinction between them (said decline was also responsible for the heavy downturn in the animated hentai industry during the 2010's, which previously used the western DVD boom to accrue more money and support more technically ambitious projects).
A common thread of discussion online happens whenever a manga which received an OVA as its first adaptation goes on to have a full anime series produced for television later down the line. Fans will often debate for quite some time as to which one is better, and which one is the definitive adaptation.
OVAs were most common in the 1980s and 1990s, particularly during the 1986-1991 asset price bubble (which, up until its bursting the following year, resulted in studios having a lot more money to back up the prospect of huge creative freedom), during which many well-known series were released in this fashion. The idea of this era as "the Golden Age of Anime" stems in part from the OVA boom, which led to a large number of unique stories being produced unrestricted and without a specific target audience and brought a level of creative freedom comparable to New Hollywood's effects on the American film industry.
With the recent rise of 12-Episode Anime series as an alternate short format, as well as streaming video over the Internet, OVAs have come to be less frequently released, though by no means extinct; the aforementioned Hellsing, Code Geass: Akito the Exiled and Ghost in the Shell: Arise are a sampling of recent OVA releases. Anime made for release on the Internet are called Original Net Animation, or ONA for short, and act as a Spiritual Successor of sorts to the OVA format (with some works, like the 2002 Azumanga Daioh anime adaptation, using the ONA format to gauge audience interest with a pilot). The model would also inform direct-to-streaming animation in the west, with those works carrying over the OVA format's association with higher-quality production values and less rigid content standards compared to cable television. Fittingly, some anime even debut on streaming services before hitting airwaves, such as JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Stone Ocean.

Examples
 Original Video Animation
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 Original Video Animation
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2023-11-18T16:45:28Z
 Original Video Animation
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DBTropes
 Original Video Animation / int_3839dd42
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Original Video Animation
 Original Video Animation / int_3839dd42
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Amada Anime Series: Super Mario Bros: The series was released on VHS in the 1980s.
 Original Video Animation / int_3839dd42
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1.0
 Original Video Animation / int_3839dd42
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1.0
 Amada Anime Series: Super Mario Bros
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Original Video Animation / int_3839dd42
 Original Video Animation / int_8a2bd31d
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Original Video Animation
 Original Video Animation / int_8a2bd31d
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Daicon III & IV: Both shorts are considered the Ur-Example, having been made for screening at the eponymous conventions they were made for (rather than in an actual theater or on TV) before seeing 8mm prints sold off to recover the staff's debts.
 Original Video Animation / int_8a2bd31d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Original Video Animation / int_8a2bd31d
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1.0
 Daicon III & IV
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Original Video Animation / int_8a2bd31d

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Original Video Animation
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Home Video Tropes
 Original Video Animation
processingCategory2
Japanese Animation Tropes
 Amada Anime Series: Super Mario Bros / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 AmuriInStarOcean
seeAlso
Original Video Animation
 CoolDevices
seeAlso
Original Video Animation
 Daicon III & IV / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 Digimon Adventure / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 Mobile Suit Gundam Unicorn / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 Morita-sanWaMukuchi
seeAlso
Original Video Animation
 PrincessRouge
seeAlso
Original Video Animation
 Robotech
seeAlso
Original Video Animation
 The Bubblegum Zone (Fanfic)
seeAlso
Original Video Animation
 The Bubblegum Zone (Fanfic)
seeAlso
Original Video Animation
 Machine Robo (Franchise)
seeAlso
Original Video Animation
 Date A Live / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 Spice and Wolf / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 Date A Live / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 High School D×D / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 Sky Wizards Academy / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 Spice and Wolf / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 DarknessAnimeSeries
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Original Video Animation
 MarvelAnimation
seeAlso
Original Video Animation
 NobuoTobita
seeAlso
Original Video Animation
 SonictheHedgehog
seeAlso
Original Video Animation
 Case Closed (Manga) / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 Gunnm (Manga) / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 Hidamari Sketch (Manga)
seeAlso
Original Video Animation
 High School Exciting Story: Tough (Manga) / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 Kamen no Maid Guy (Manga) / int_4877d9f
type
Original Video Animation
 Morita-sanWaMukuchi
seeAlso
Original Video Animation
 Mysterious Girlfriend X (Manga)
seeAlso
Original Video Animation
 Ganbare Goemon (Video Game) / int_4877d9f
type
Original Video Animation
 Mega Man X (Video Game) / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 Super Robot Wars 30 (Video Game) / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 Hakuouki (Visual Novel) / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 Touhou (Web Animation)
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Original Video Animation
 Panzer World Galient / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation
 Battle Angel Alita (Manga) / int_4877d9f
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Original Video Animation